When it comes to cult Italian horror films, a few notorious names instantly spring to mind. From Lucio Fulci to Ruggero Deodato, Dario Argento and Mario Bava; there’s no doubt that these directors are some of the best names in cult Italian cinema. But with Shameless Screen Entertainment’s upcoming release of one of the greatest and most atmospheric gialli, The House With Laughing Windows, what better time than now, to look at the man responsible for this eerie thriller; Pupi Avati. Having directed over 40 films and television show, his career has spanned many genres from buddy comedies and even a musical, but he’ll always be best-known for his gripping horror films!

His film career kicked off instantly with a  little horror film titled Balsamus l’uomo di Satana (AKA. Blood Relations – The Man Of Satan). With the tagline ‘Grotesque ‘Bordello’ of Nightmares!’ and it’s surreal, twisted nature, you’d be mistaken for thinking Pupi Avati’s future would be gushing with blood, gore and gruel. However, his entries in the horror genre have been low on guts, but high on tension!

In 1976, Avati created his masterpiece. The House With The Laughing Windows takes the giallo genre (which was beginning to fade) into frightening new lands. What can be described as Don’t Look Now meets Fulci’s Don’t Torture A Duckling, this giallo  is set away from the hussle-bustle swinging cities and deliberately subverts the gratuitous nudity and violence that this ‘genre’ had become known for. Instead, we’re treated to a Gothically stylistic rural thriller, drenched and entombed in an eerie atmosphere, taking reference from the best of Mario Bava.

His next cult success came six years later with the bizarre zombie film, Zeder. Dipping his toes into the genre, Avati’s surreal, mesmeric fingerprints can be seen stamped all over this movie. While Italian cinema was bombarded with throat-rippings, flesh-eating and shotgun blasts to the face in the hugely popular zombie boom, once again Avati gives us something much more refined. This chiller ditches the gore for a moody, dark and, again, atmospheric classic.

Since these two incredible movies, Pupi Avati has dabbled with the horror genre with very successful results. In the mid-90s, his film The Arcane Encounter proved once again his talent, with Guillermo del Toro being one of it’s biggest fans!

But don’t be fooled into thinking that Avati doesn’t have a sleazy side. Whilst his directed films may be classy, some of the screenplays he’s written are anything but! Helping to pen Lamberto Bava’s first movie, Macabre, Avati is also responsible for writing the super controversial Salo!


Shameless Screen Entertainment’s THE HOUSE WITH LAUGHING WINDOWS is out Monday 19th November. Pre-order yours here!

 

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The new nerve-wrecking British horror film, A Night In The Woods (out on DVD now!) tells the heart-thumping tale of a group who, despite warnings from the locals, spend the night in one of the most terrifying woods in the world; the legendary Wistman’s Woods, Dartmoor, Devon. It isn’t long before all hell breaks loose and the group quickly learn why the locals never dare enter the woods after night.  But are these woods really evil or is it just a load of fictional nonsense designed to give you sleepless nights? Well, according to local mythology, the evil that lurks in the darkness of these trees is too real.

The woods themselves are bizarre and otherworldly Known for it’s short, gnarly and stunted trees, these woods have long since been associated with tales of ghosts, Death, Hellhounds and even the Devil. Legend has it that the woods themselves were created by the Druids and was used as one of the main hotspots for their most grizzly, gruesome and terrifying human sacrifices.

It is often said that these dark woods are the home of the Wisht Hounds; a pack of fearsome hounds from the darkest pits of Hell that roam the moors and the woodlands each night, in search of lost souls or sinners/those who have yet to be baptized. Locals have often reported the sounds of blood-curdling howls and growls coming from the woods at night. Perhaps these tales could explain the mysterious cloven footprints that appeared on a snowy morning in Devon, known as The Devil’s Footprints.

For more info on Dartmoor's legends click here!

The stories of the woods don’t stop there however! The legends are in abundance here! There’s tales of a phantom terrier. Tales of a ghostly army of white hooded figures which roam the in an ancient area known as the Way Of The Dead. And tales even the locals are too scared to mentioned! Would you stay a night in the single most haunted woodland in the UK? Would you risk being the chew-toy of a pack of flaming Hell Hounds? Would you dare to witness what evil these woods hide? More importantly, would you survive A Night In The Woods?

A Night In The Woods is out on DVD now! Order yours today.

 
 
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